Showing posts with label opera north. Show all posts
Showing posts with label opera north. Show all posts

Saturday, 21 July 2012

6 Week Theatre Challenge: 16 -20

16. What is the best use of set you have seen?

The set for Frankenstein was brilliant, imaginative and highly visual.

17. What is your favourite regional theatre?

The Liverpool Everyman is a charming theatre which is currently undergoing a renovation. I really hope that it keeps all its unique qualities and doesn't lose any of its quirkiness.

18. What is the best opera you have seen?

The best opera I have seen is Opera North's staging of Wanger's Die Walkure. You can see my review of it here.

19. What is the most recent thing you have seen at the theatre?

Metamorphosis Titian: 2012 is the most recent thing I have seen. You can view my review here.

20. What is the saddest thing you have seen at the theatre?

I haven't found that many productions highly emotional, however Machina nearly brought a tear to my eye. The end of King Lear always has me feeling glum.

Tuesday, 3 July 2012

Die Walkure - Opera North/BSH

Wagner's ring cycle is the epic when it comes to opera. Clocking in at nearly 20 hours for the whole cycle, 'the first evening', Die Walkure consumes nearly six of those hours and is probably Wagner's most accomplished opera in the cycle. To take on a whole cycle is a mammoth task for any opera company in both the sheer scale of the task and the amount of money involved and so for Opera North it is quite a challenge. However, it seems that Opera North has lived up to this challenge and has made Die Walkure into an exciting and thrilling opera experience.
Ingeniously, Opera North have decided to stage their cycle over four years and in concert form, leaving behind the gimmicks and fireworks other production fall back on when staging the cycle. This decision by Opera North has to be applauded as it was a huge risk to take - would it leave the audience unengaged? Would we eventually loose interest? I can happily report that it had the complete opposite effect. The five and a half hours passed by in an flash and we, as the audience, were left craving the second day of the cycle; Siegfried. What this staging gave the audience was a chance to fully immerse themselves in the music as for once the orchestra were not hidden in the orchestra pit of the Royal Opera House or at many alike theatres, instead we could see the music being created first hand - something which I believe is vital when it comes to any opera.
Besides from the orchestral staging, another impressive artistic decision taken by Opera North was to have a triptych of screens above the orchestra which were flooded with beautiful and mesmerising video footage such as a dense, snowy forest in Siegmund's escape and the running stream turning a blood red at his death. The screens really added another dimension to what was already a wonderful production.
The cast were all at the top of their game, bringing the fiery intensity needed for every character in Die Walkure. Erik Nelson Werner gave a passionate account of a man who's love for Sieglinde meant more than life and Katarina Karneus gave a brilliant diva-like quality to Fricka. The Valkyries also gave stellar performances, pleading with their father to not punish their beloved sister.
Five stars somehow does not seem a high enough rating to give this exquisite concert hall staging of Wanger's masterpiece. Everything seamlessly fell into place and helped create a truly unique afternoon at the opera. I will most definitely be in attendance at Opera North's staging of Siegried, the next (and penultimate) opera in Der Ring de Nibelungen.